Offshore Drilling and Testing for Oil in the Atlantic

Offshore Drilling and Testing for Oil in the Atlantic

The Obama administration is permitting seismic surveys from Delaware to the middle of Florida to determine the existence and size of offshore oil and gas reserves. The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is reviewing 9 permits from oil companies for conducting these surveys and is taking public comments. In addition, the Administration has placed drilling in the Atlantic in it Five-Year Oil Leasing Plan under development.

There are two threats to South Carolina businesses from this exploration and possible offshore drilling.

Seismic Airgun Blasting

South Carolina’s fishing and parts of tourism industry are greatly at risk from the seismic airgun blasting used in the exploration process. Seismic airguns are towed behind ships and shoot loud blasts of compressed air through the water and miles into the seabed. These blasts are repeated every ten seconds, 24 hours a day, for days and weeks at a time.

The negative impact to our marine mammals, sea turtles, fish and other wildlife will be significant. The federal government has estimated that 138,000 whales and dolphins will be injured and millions of other ocean wildlife will be harmed.

For whales and dolphins, the impacts include temporary and permanent hearing loss, abandonment of habitat, disruption of mating and feeding, and even beach strandings and death. These animals rely on their hearing to find food, communicate, and reproduce. Their ability to hear is a life or death matter. These marine animals are a tourist attraction particularly for our lowcountry coastal communities.

Airgun blasts also kill fish eggs and larvae and scare away fish from important habitats. Previous seismic surveys have resulted in catch rates of cod and haddock to decline by 40 to 80 percent for thousands of miles. Such disturbance will have negative economic impacts on our South Carolina fishing and fishing-related tourism industries. More than 6,000 people in SC are employed in the fishing industry and commercial and recreational fishing accounts for more than 500 million dollars in sales per year.

Oil Spills

There is already much evidence that there is insufficient oil and gas reserves off the South Carolina coast for it to be economical for extraction according to Mitchell Colgan, chairman of the College of Charleston’s Geology and Environmental Geosciences Department. However, this information is not based on seismic airgun blasting, which the proponents of offshore drilling hope will find different results. If this more dangerous form of testing simply confirms earlier data that there is a lack of oil and gas reserves off the South Carolina coast, then all the damage to wildlife and our economy will have been in vain with the related costs borne by our state’s small businesses.

However, in the unlikely scenario that drilling is economically possible, even more significant economic risks face our tourism economy from the inevitable oil spills. Fishing, tourism and recreation support roughly 80,000 jobs and contributes over $7 billion annually. We all remember the recent disastrous economic and environmental impact of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in 2010. The Gulf coast communities took years to recover. Putting our small business coastal tourism industry at risk so that petroleum companies can profit and a few jobs created is a foolhardy gamble.

S.C. Small Business Chamber Position

The SCSBCC opposes seismic airgun blasting to explore for oil and gas reserves off our coast. We also oppose offshore drilling for oil and gas.

Should the BOEM include the Mid-Atlantic coast in its offshore drilling plan, the following should be required:

Prior to the testing the oil companies should be required to produce a detailed documentation of existing ocean wildlife as well as a thorough accounting of individual business revenue and jobs associated with our fishing and tourism industry. State revenue derived from taxes from businesses and jobs associated with our fishing and tourism industry should also be determined prior to any testing.

The testing oil companies should be required to obtain sufficient liability insurance to compensate businesses, workers and the state of South Carolina for any loss of revenue due to the testing.

Prior to any actual offshore oil or gas drilling, the oil companies should be required to produce and make public an action plan for containment and recovery of oil from a spill. The oil companies should also be required to obtain sufficient liability insurance to compensate businesses, workers and the state of South Carolina for any loss of revenue due to an oil spill or related incident.

Update:

In November of 2015, SCSBCC President and CEO Frank Knapp joined other businesses and elected officials in meeting with the BOEM officials in Washington to make the case for taking Atlantic Coast offshore Drilling out of the Five-Year Plan for oil leasing.

On March 15, 2016, the Obama Administration announced that it would not allow oil and natural gas drilling off the Mid-Atlantic coast thus reversing its earlier position. The SCSCBCC was proud to have played such a prominent role in protecting our vibrant, small business tourism economy from the negative impact of offshore drilling.

Because seismic testing permits were still on tract to be approved by BOEM, in September of 2016 the SCSBCC called for an organizational meeting in North Myrtle Beach of East Coast business organizations and individual businesses. At that meeting the Business Alliance for Protecting the Atlantic Coast (BAPAC) was formed with its members subsequently meeting in November with BOEM, the White House Council on Environmental Quality and the Department of Commerce calling for the seismic permits to be denied. Two petitions were also submitted to the President with that message.

Then in January of 2017 the Obama Administration denied all seismic testing permits for the Atlantic. Six seismic companies have appealed this ruling.

BAPAC has been formalized with a Board of Directors. Mr. Knapp was elected President and CEO of the organization. As of May 2017 BAPAC had over 41,000 businesses and 500,000 commercial fishing families supporting its efforts to continue opposing offshore drilling and testing in the Atlantic.